Experts Call for Caution After Rhode Island Cyberattacks

Providence Public Schools and Rhode Island’s state benefits portal were both breached in recent months

Share
Experts Call for Caution After Rhode Island Cyberattacks
Copy

Rhode Island experts are calling for greater awareness about cybersecurity, following breaches to Providence Public Schools and Rhode Island’s state benefits portal.

“The attacks had been coming so much faster and more frequently in the past few years,” said Douglas Alexander, Director of Rhode Island College’s Institute for Cybersecurity & Emerging Technologies.

In September, Providence Public Schools shut down their internet networks for days, after detecting a cyberattack. Cybercrime group Medusa took responsibility for the hack and demanded a million-dollar ransom for student and employee data. The ransom went unpaid, and the personal information was leaked.

Then, in December, news broke that a cybercrime group called Brain Cipher hacked into RIBridges, Rhode Island’s state benefits portal. Though the breach is still being investigated, Governor McKee said that the attack could have exposed the data of an estimated 650,000 people.

“I can’t say I was surprised to see the cyberattacks,” said former U.S. Representative Jim Langevin. (The congressman has been a long-time advocate for cybersecurity. He is also the distinguished chair of the Cybersecurity Institute at Rhode Island College.) “They are of course unfortunate, but they’re so pervasive.”

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi swears in Rep. James Langevin (D-RI) for the 110th Congress.
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi swears in Rep. James Langevin (D-RI) for the 110th Congress.
Alamy

Why are cyberattacks increasing?

Douglas Alexander said that cyberattacks to have become easier to carry out because of “credential stuffing.” Credential stuffing is the practice of taking known username and password combinations, and trying them on other accounts.

“Say, here’s someone’s account that got stolen from LinkedIn. I’m going to try it on Gmail. I’m going to try it on the bank,” said Alexander. “And they can do this at scale with hundreds of millions of accounts at a time and just see what hits.”

One study found that 24 billion username and password combinations are available on cybercriminal marketplaces.

Ransomware is a common form of cyberattack, said Alexander. Once hackers gain access to a system, they can lock users out of the system, essentially holding it hostage. Ransomwares attacks increased by 70 percent in 2023, according to the international crime data organization, INTERPOL.

Langevin partly attributed the increase in ransomware attacks to the rise of cryptocurrency. These online currencies allow cybercriminals to extract funds, without getting caught, he said.

“Bad guys can get paid in cryptocurrency, and then it’s virtually untraceable,” said Langevin.

What can individuals do to protect themselves?

Douglas Alexander recommended that everyone freeze their credit on Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion to protect their identities.

“What it does is it prevents any bad actor from pretending to be you and opening an account in your name,” said Alexander.

Langevin and Alexander also recommended keeping logins private, using multifactor authentication, and being aware of common scams, such as gift card scams.

“This isn’t just a concern for computer geeks anymore,” said Alexander. “It’s something everyone needs to think about and learn about.”

For more, watch our interview with Douglas Alexander and former congressman Jim Langevin on Rhode Island PBS Weekly:

The state senator shares his takeaways from the Washington Bridge hearing and weighs in on gun policy, health care strains, and the push for a new medical school at URI
A group of nonprofits from Rhode Island found themselves at the heart of a dispute over food aid that reached all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court
New research led by Brown University scientists suggests cannabis may curb short-term alcohol consumption — but raises big questions about swapping one substance for another
Federal budget cuts will yank SNAP, Medicaid from thousands of lawful immigrants
Rhode Island’s junior U.S. Senator says many international leaders at the COP30 conference finally recognized the necessity of addressing the rising cost of property insurance caused by more frequent and intense weather events
Spotted lanternflies, Japanese barberry, Oriental bittersweet – When plants and animals like these invade our environment, they can disrupt other organisms that are native to the region. But can we stop these species? And should we?